Participation in adult learning decreased during the first wave of the
COVID-19 pandemic
A recent OECD brief shows that, under a certain
number of assumptions, COVID-19 induced
shutdowns of economic activities decreased workers’
participation in non-formal learning by an average
of 18%, and in informal learning by 25%. Before the
pandemic, workers across OECD countries spent on
average 4.9 hours per week on informal learning
and 0.7 hours on non-formal learning. According to
estimates, during the pandemic, it dropped to 3.7
hours for informal learning and 0.6 hours per week for
non formal learning. This represents a notable amount
of lost learning, which may not be easily recovered
(OECD, 2021
[27]
).
Data from the EU Labour Force Survey for European
countries and from the Continuous Employment Survey
for Costa Rica show a similar pattern by examining
how the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic has
affected participation in adult learning (formal and/or
non-formal education and training). Figure 13 shows
that relative to the same quarter in 2019, the number of
adults reporting they participated in formal
and/or non-formal education and training in the
month prior to the survey decreased significantly in the
second quarter of 2020. This is particularly evident in
Austria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, France,
Latvia, Poland, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia and
Switzerland, where the number of adults participating
in formal and/or non-formal education and training
decreased by 30% or more between the second
quarter of 2019 and the second quarter of 2020,
for both women and men (i.e. during the peak of the
first wave of COVID-19 in Europe). Greece seems to
be an outlier, at least when considering male adults.
However, it is worth highlighting that participation rates
in formal and/or non-formal education and training
are rather low in Greece. In this case, small variations
of the participation rates over time may have a large
impact on the relative change over the same period
(Figure 13).
The results presented in Figure 13 have at least two
important limitations. First, as observed in the European
Union’s
Education and Training Monitor 2018 ,
the way participation in adult learning is measured
in the EU Labour Force Survey is rather restrictive,
as it measures the “share of population who report
having participated in formal and/or non-formal
learning activities during the 4 weeks prior to being
interviewed”. This is problematic in the context of adult
learning, which is a sporadic activity, often taken
up once or at most twice a year for a short duration
(European Commission, 2018
[28]
).
Second, this section reports only some preliminary
analyses on the impact of COVID-19 on participation
in adult learning during the first wave of the pandemic
and they must be interpreted with care. Further
analyses, covering a wider range of quarters, are
needed. In fact, third and fourth quarter data suggest
that participation rates increased again considerably
in Latvia and Switzerland, for example. Most likely,
the steep drop in participation observed between the
second quarter of 2019 and the second quarter of
2020 is a consequence of the widespread lockdown
restrictions implemented during the first wave of the
pandemic. During this period, non-formal education
providers needed some time to adapt to the provision
of online-only courses.